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Swami Sadashiva Brahmendra Sar (Nil)     28 December 2010

New Year celebrations in distinct calendars

Modern new year celebrations (As given on a web site)

The most common modern celebrations are:

  • The Chinese New Year occurs every year at a new moon during the winter. The exact date can fall anytime between January 21 and February 21, inclusive, on the Gregorian Calendar. Because the Chinese calander is astronimically defined, unlike the Gregorian Calendar, the drift of the seasons will change the range. Each year is symbolized by one of twelve animals and one of five elements, with the combinations of animals and elements (or stems) cycling every sixty years. It is perhaps the most important Chinese holiday. The Chinese New Year is generally celebrated with fire-crackers, and in some places with a parade.
  • The Vietnamese New Year is the Têt Nguyen Dan. It is celebrated on the same day as Chinese New Year.
  • Some neo-pagans celebrate Samhain as a new year's day representing the new cycle of the Wheel of the Year, although they do not use a different calendar that starts on this day.
  • The Hindu New Year begins after 15 days from Holi .


Learning

 2 Replies

G. ARAVINTHAN (Legal Consultant / Solicitor)     28 December 2010

Thanks Tripathi Sir for the information

Bhartiya No. 1 (Nationalist)     29 December 2010

Sir, thanks for the information.

People wish to celebrate whether New Year or any other Day.


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